Wednesday, February 15, 2006

From Seth Godin’s “The Reason” post:

The reason that you have a water bubbler in your office is that it used to be difficult to filter water effectively.

The reason we still have a water bubbler in our office is that filtration may remove biological impurities, which may spread disease, but not chemical ones, which may affect the flavor or may also be detrimental to the health of the drinker.  Plus, ours is one of those that provides instant hot or cold water, so it’s useful as well as healthy.  The presence isn’t due to an archaic “we’ve always done it this way”, it’s actually an improvement over the tap.  And it’s plumbed directly into the water line, so no one needs to change the bottle.  This is also why my fridge has a water dispenser in the door.

The reason that Blockbuster exists is that VCR tapes used to cost more than $100.

That’s why Blockbuster was started.  Now that VCR tapes are well below $100, and are on the verge of extinction, should Blockbuster cease to exist?  Not hardly.  Blockbuster stores serve a group of people Netflix can’t—the very impatient.  Video on demand just hasn’t arrived, and there’s no reason to think that Blockbuster won’t try and have a hand in that in the future.  The presence of something from the past doesn’t necessarily indicate a status-quo, same-old-same-old mentality.  Not that Blockbuster is any shining example of adaptation, but it seems to be filling a need even today.

The reason that SUVs have a truck chassis is that the government regulates vehicles with a truck chassis differently.

No, that’s why you get a tax break for buying an Explorer.  My SUV (a Honda CRV) is actually built on a car chassis, as is the Murano, Rav 4 and a few other small SUVs.  Maybe SUVs are built on a car or truck chassis because there are economic and safety engineering reasons for minimizing the number of chasses in an automaker’s fleet.

I am with Heather on the lawn thing—out of frustration, my neighbor has mowed mine on a couple of occasions.

Now playing: The Grateful Dead - Sugar Magnolia (Remastered Version)

Wednesday, February 15, 2006 11:23:41 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)
 Monday, February 13, 2006

Splash Blog is a Flickr-like service, with a client app that runs on my Treo 700w.  There’s also a web-based admin, which I can use to upload photos from my Nikon D50.  I suppose I could pop the SD card from my Nikon into my Treo and upload from there, but while the EVDO network is fast, it’s not as fast as my cable internet.

I’ve been playing with the service for a couple of weeks, and it’s pretty cool.  On the Splashblog now is the obligatory photo of the dog (one of the dogs, anyway), my buddy Jon’s black and gold inventory, and a few photos from Franklin on Ice.

Now playing: Mott the Hoople - All the Way from Memphis

Monday, February 13, 2006 8:17:23 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)
 Sunday, February 12, 2006

My search referrals are filling up with this, for a smattering of reasons.  To make it easy, here’s the answer in one spot:

The song in the Saturn commercial is “Home” from his “Carencro” CD.  This is the commercial where the sides of the buildings fold down for the Vue.  The rest of the albumn is good, but this song is different from the rest.  If you want it in iTunes, click the link below on a machine that has iTunes loaded.  If you want the whole album via Amazon, click on the album cover.

BTW – Carencro is his hometown in Louisiana.

Now playing: Marc Broussard - Home

Carencro, by Marc Broussard
Click here for the album at Amazon

Sunday, February 12, 2006 11:15:22 AM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)
 Friday, February 10, 2006

My buddy Nathan comes through with this today--www.minixm.com.  This is XM Radio's official lightweight stream site, meant for devices like the Treo 700w.  Access the site through your Pocket IE, and choose your channel.  When the stream begins, Windows Media Player will start and handle the playback.  You can get the "now playing" in either WMP or PIE.  The sound quality isn't fantastic, but good enough, especially for the news programs.

Bad news for Treo 650 users--the XM stream requires support for Windows Media Player 9 or better, which apparently isn't available for the Palm OS.  Trying to open the stream crashed Bob's 650.

Friday, February 10, 2006 2:03:48 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)
 Thursday, February 09, 2006

OK, my turn.  I must be pretty unique, since all my "look-alikes" were pretty low relevance.  A handsome group, nonetheless.  (note to self: next time disconnect from iPod before taking self-portrait).  Have your own fun at http://www.myheritage.com/.  Hat tip: Scott H.

 

Thursday, February 09, 2006 8:02:17 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)
 Monday, February 06, 2006

The Seahawks took the field to The Verve's "Bittersweet Symphony", while the Steelers took the field to Fat Boy Slim's "Right Here, Right Now".  What could be more bittersweet than making it to The Big Game, and then losing?

That was obviously a subliminal message to the Stepford referees as to which team should win the game.  Gillette was in on it, too.  See, Proctor & Gillette needs a new commercial for its new razor, and Hasselbeck wasn't as likely a candidate for a shave as Roethlisberger was.

Monday, February 06, 2006 4:06:18 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)
 Friday, February 03, 2006

I love my hometown of Louisville, KY (a.k.a., Louavull), and I love my adopted hometown of Pittsburgh, PA.  The Louisville Courir-Journal's RSS feeds helop me stay in touch with the news back home, and today's issue had a great article on one member of the Steelers Nation, and his lucky leg:

Four weeks ago, in the first round of the playoffs, Pittsburgh trailed Cincinnati 17-7 in the second quarter. Gray decided to kick-start the Steelers with his prosthetic leg -- the one with the Steelers helmet on the shin.

"I just popped it off and started banging on the table with it," Gray said. "Everybody was like, 'What is that?' I said, That's my lucky leg!'

But why does our man have a prosthetic leg festooned with Steelers logos?

"I was thinking about getting a Steelers tattoo," Gray said, "but I was like, I need a new leg anyway, so why not get a Steeler leg? That'll kill two birds. I'll have a tattoo and a leg -- and I won't have to worry about the pain of the tattoo."

You have to appreciate the thought process, there.

Full article at http://www.courier-journal.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20060203/FEATURES/602030329/1011/rss05.

Friday, February 03, 2006 5:13:17 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)
 Wednesday, February 01, 2006

Not my year for gadgets.  First, my NetGear SC101 suffered a breakdown, and now my cool Logitech Wireless Headphones for iPod have given up their ghost as well.  As soon as the music started playing, the headphones would lose connection with the transmitter.  I could re-pair the headphones and the transmitter, but as soon as the music started, they'd lose their connection again.

E-mailing Logitech support gave me a couple of steps to try, including the reset button and re-pairing, but no fix.  So I'm on the phone with tech support to get an RMA.  I'm going to miss these things until the replacement arrives.

Wednesday, February 01, 2006 6:23:54 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)
 Monday, January 30, 2006

Staples gladly exchanged the faulty SC101, and re-installation was a breeze.  I uninstalled the previous version of the config software, connected the hard drives to the new toaster, plugged it in, reinstalled the config software, and I was off to the races again.  There was no need to repartition the drives, and the data was all intact.  The config tool recognized the old partitions, and the new device actually seems a little faster.  A nuisance, but Netgear and Staples both made the whole process a lot easier.

Monday, January 30, 2006 11:47:45 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)